Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Overcoming Bias Commenter's avatar

@Tony, I also couldn't help but think of the random walk in understanding the role of reviews.

Expand full comment
Overcoming Bias Commenter's avatar

There may be many criteria on which peer reviewers do agree, but which don't show up in this study because authors already know those criteria and have satisfied them before the paper is even submitted.

For example, most reviewers agree that a P-value of greater than 0.05 is not acceptable, so papers that don't meet that standard don't get written in the first place. This actually indicates that peer review works very well; it exerts its influence through the foreknowledge of review, not the review itself.

Maybe it's sort of like predicting stock prices - if most investors agree that a stock is underpriced, the price goes up immediately, erasing their agreement. All that remains is the residual disagreement, making it appear that they can't agree on anything. Maybe this study points to a kind of EMH for scientific publication.

Expand full comment
2 more comments...

No posts